"When I come into the [Museum] and see this magnificent creation of Kelly Johnson and his Skunk Works team, I pinch myself at times to realize I was allowed to fly this revolutionary aircraft."
More about SR-71 pilot Buz Carpenter on this #ASQ article: https://t.co/RWb7v8i2iz
With the transition to Air & Space Quarterly, we are sunsetting this Twitter account and will soon stop updating it.
Follow @airandspace for Air & Space Quarterly articles and more your aviation and space content.
We are sad to learn of the loss of our friend Brig. Gen. Charles McGee.
We have been lucky to know and work with General McGee as he shared with our visitors the role he played as a Tuskegee Airman, breaking racial barriers and helping to win World War II.
Current Air & Space magazine subscribers will receive Air & Space Quarterly this year and will then have the opportunity to become an @airandspace member to continue receiving #ASQ.
Have questions about your subscription? Visit https://t.co/s9lbYZZ9HC
Air & Space magazine is now Air & Space Quarterly, a membership publication of @airandspace.
Led by a team of Museum experts and Air & Space magazine veterans, #ASQ remains your source for all things aviation and space. Start exploring: https://t.co/jynHkLND54
#TDIH in 2009: The Ares I-X rocket lifted off on a test flight. At 327-feet tall, the test vehicle produced 2.6 million pounds of thrust to accelerate the rocket to Mach 4.76, just shy of hypersonic speed. This illustration from @NASA breaks down how all of that works.
Today in 1968, Wally Schirra, Donn Eisele, and Walter Cunningham splashed down in the Atlantic in the Apollo 7 command module, ending a successful mission: https://t.co/ee7MeCSTuh
Infrared Dawn: After years of delay and frustration, the James Webb Space Telescope is at last on target to launch in December.
https://t.co/zk9q9n6Y54
💎 Lights. Camera. Lucy. The stage is set for our #LucyMission to launch to the ancient Trojan asteroids on Oct. 16.
• Live coverage at 5am ET (09:00 UTC).
• Liftoff targeted for 5:34am ET (09:34 UTC).
Watch with us here and on NASA TV: https://t.co/z1RgZwQkWS
#TDIH in 2012: Felix Baumgartner became the first person to break the speed of sound in free fall. The capsule and pressure suit from Baumgartner's jump are part of the Air and Space collection. #IdeasThatDefy
Infrared Dawn: After years of delay and frustration, the James Webb Space Telescope is at last on target to launch in December.
https://t.co/zk9q9n6Y54
Today in 1937, the first production Hawker Hurricane I made its first flight. It was the first British monoplane fighter and ranks among the most important aircraft designs in military aviation history. See a Hawker Hurricane IIC at the Udvar-Hazy Center: https://t.co/a0iMXrtgEd
Infrared Dawn: After years of delay and frustration, the James Webb Space Telescope is at last on target to launch in December.
https://t.co/zk9q9noyWC
Venetian Sight: The last probe to land on it lasted only two hours, but the planet nearest Earth has answers we want. So there’s a plan afoot to send a new lander to this world of hellish heat, crushing barometric pressure, and acidic atmosphere.
https://t.co/gJ8UBE15oR
Sounding on Empty: There’s a new way to alert airplane pilots that they’re running out of gas. The technology, called modal propellant gauging (MPG), uses sound frequencies to determine fuel levels.
https://t.co/lJBrkcQZy3
Venetian Sight: The last probe to land on it lasted only two hours, but the planet nearest Earth has answers we want. So there’s a plan afoot to send a new lander to this world of hellish heat, crushing barometric pressure, and acidic atmosphere.
https://t.co/gJ8UBDJu0h